The olive oil is classified depending on the acidity. You need a laboratory analysis and a tasting done by a professional (like a sommelier for wines) to certify the highest quality that is the Extra Virgin Olive Oil (EVOO). To achieve this distinction, you need low acidity (under 0.8% of oleic acid) and a specific flavour to palate and smell. Virgin olive oil ranges between (0.8 - 0.2%).
.jpg/:/cr=t:21.8%25,l:0%25,w:100%25,h:56.39%25/rs=w:400,h:300.7518796992481,cg:true)
Olives are picked once a year, starting from as early as October and as late as February. Everything depends on weather conditions, ripening of the olives, owners' preferences. The olives are tested for their ripening by checking the proportion of water and fat content.
If the olives are picked early, they have very little water content and they yield very little but high quality olive oil.
If they are picked too late when the fruit is bursting with water, they yield more olive oil but with lower quality.
If you were the farmer, what would you do?

To produce 1 litre of olive oil you need to mill 4 to 5kg of olives. But for higher quaiity olive oil (EVOO) you might need to pick between 8 to 10kg of olives. (Remember the last question? -That's why)
And just to let you know, whilst 1litre of water weights 1kg, 1 litre of olive oil weights around 900 grams.

There are over 1000 recognised of olive varieties, also called cultivars which have developed over period of around 6000 years, which results in distinct characteristics, oil yield, taste, and fruit size.
Olive oil made from a single variety is called a monovarietal, or monocultivar olive oil. Blends are crafted using oils from two or more cultivars to achieve consistency at the expense of character.
Single-estate olive oil is crucial for quality, flavor, and transparency because it offers producers control over the growing, harvesting, and pressing, resulting in unique, authentic tastes reflecting specific terroir (soil, climate) and ensuring freshness.
For more information you can visit Olive Oil Times

Our Hojiblanca olive trees are the reason for the high quality and fantastic taste of our olive oil. They are predominantly between 100 and 200 years old and possibly older in some instances and represent four generations of careful management by our family.
Our parents, grandparents and great grandparents all walked through the same trees and for that reason they are firmly part of the Cortijo Coracho™ family.
We have trees with two, three and even some with four legs (trunks) which are fantastically gnarled and twisted. They are planted in the traditional way, with wide spaces between the rows which in the past would have been used to grow crops and graze animals. This wide spacing provides excellent air flow and allows the trees to grow and spread naturally.
The trees are rain fed, which can reduce oil yield but, that along with the age of the trees, provides oil with a fantastic taste which reflects the soil and climate of our farm.

Quite a few people have asked what cortijo means, as they have never heard that word before. A cortijo is a traditional farm house in Andalucia and other counties in the South of Spain. Typically they are link ed to olive oil production, cereal and cattle. Some cortijos have a mill to produce olive oil. The mill is called molino or almazara. In Italy, the word used is frantoio. Some cortijos like ours are arranged around a central courtyard and may have a tower which were used keep a watch on the land or for storage..
